purple = morado (more- ah-doe) or púrpuro (poor-poor-oh)
teal blue would be translated 'bleu canard' in French.
cerceta, trullo
Esto es ... (the color)
Blanco, albo, albino, ebúrneo...
morado
When a spanish speaker says that something is "de color naranja" it means that it is orange.
Dorado is Spanish for gold.
Yes, they usually come after the noun they describe.
El azul es mi color preferido.
YELLOW
"Rosado" means pink in Spanish. It is often used to describe the color pink or something that has a pinkish hue.
reddish
The MΔori word for white is "ma" or "maero." It can be used to describe the color white or to describe something that is white in color.
Used to describe the stone, it is a noun. Used to describe the color of something, it is an adjective.
Yes, colors are adjectives if they describe something (gray socks, a gray area). They can be nouns when they do not describe something (I like the color gray).
"Naranja" is the fruit and "Anarajando" is something with orange color.
point to something green and say that's green.
The word "annoying" in Spanish is "molesto." It can be used to describe something that bothers or irritates someone.
"Dhuibh" is Irish Gaelic for "black." It is typically used to describe the color black or something that is dark in color.
In Spanish, "las negras" can be translated to "the black ones" or "the black women." The term can refer to a group of black women or can be used to describe something feminine that is black in color.
I'm not sure if it's oficially considered a color, but when you describe something with the word 'hoar' it would mean a whitish-grey color.
When a spanish speaker says that something is "de color naranja" it means that it is orange.